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Appaloosa (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:152
Fresh:116
Rotten:36
Average Rating:6.6/10
Consensus: A traditional genre western, Appaloosa sets itself apart with smart psychology, an intriguing love triangle, and good chemistry between the leads.
Runtime: 1 hr 56 mins
Genre: Westerns
Theatrical Release:Sep 19, 2008 Limited
Box Office: $20,157,730
Synopsis: Actor Ed Harris takes only his second stab at directing, following the Oscar-winning feature POLLOCK (2000) with this spirited western. Harris draws on a strong cast, many of whom have acted with... Actor Ed Harris takes only his second stab at directing, following the Oscar-winning feature POLLOCK (2000) with this spirited western. Harris draws on a strong cast, many of whom have acted with him in previous films, to tell the story of two gunfighters attempting to bring peace to the small town of Appaloosa in the late 1800s. Virgil Cole (Harris) and Everett Hitch (Viggo Mortensen) ride into the windswept New Mexico town and are hired to bring vigilante entrepreneur Randall Bragg (Jeremy Irons) to justice. Bragg has imposed a reign of terror over Appaloosa, but his murderous actions are tempered when Cole and Hitch take control. Matters get complicated when widower Allison French (Renee Zellweger) flounces into town and variously woos Cole, Hitch, and Bragg, allowing Harris to throw in a few neat twists as his two principal characters attempt to bring the miscreant entrepreneur to justice. APPALOOSA is a slow-moving and beautifully shot feature that perfectly translates the dusky New Mexico landscape to celluloid. The film stands shoulder to shoulder with 21st-century westerns such as THE ASSASSINATION OF JESSE JAMES BY THE COWARD ROBERT FORD and THE PROPOSITON, and much like those films Harris's feature draws heavily on deeply affecting performances from his leads. Irons is particularly affecting as the baleful Bragg, who brings a real air of menace to the screen any time he appears on camera. The nuanced turns by Harris and Mortensen play like a master class in subtlety, with the two seasoned actors perfectly delivering two stoic characters who are masking a lifetime of pain and suffering. Harris's feature is a welcome addition to the fold of introspective westerns, effortlessly standing alongside similar efforts such as Clint Eastwood's UNFORGIVEN or James Mangold's 3:10 TO YUMA. [More]
Starring: Ed Harris, Viggo Mortensen, Renée Zellweger, Jeremy Irons
Starring: Ed Harris, Viggo Mortensen, Renée Zellweger, Jeremy Irons, Timothy Spall, Lance Henriksen
Director: Ed Harris
Director: Ed Harris
Screenwriter: Ed Harris, Robert Knott
Producer: Ed Harris, Robert Knott, Ginger Sledge
Composer: Jeff Beal
Studio: Warner Bros.
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Reviews for Appaloosa
It is as though Harris could not decide whether he was making the classic western of his boyhood dreams, or merely a pastiche of it. The result, falling somewhere between the two, ends up being neither here nor there.
Appaloosa demonstrates a better sense of history than Paul Thomas Anderson’s hysterical There Will Be Blood. But Harris isn’t a good enough director; he loses the mythical air that drives home a great Western’s point.
It was at times incredibly slow and even poorly edited, and I’ve never understood the appeal of Renee Zelwegger.
too authentic to be populist, yet too familiar to transcend the genre and hang with the bona fide classics.
If a western is going to be this slow, it needs to have a lot more tension, and deeper meaning, than this one.
Apart from the pleasure of hearing Harris and Mortensen trade old-married-couple quips, there’s little to distinguish Appaloosa from its legion of ancestors.
We just want the movie to ride off in the sunset to rest among all the other disappointing westerns in Boot Hill.
There is plenty of plot but not enough story. And the film unfolds in short scenes strung together that beg to be expanded into more detailed examinations of behavior.
These days, westerns are a dying breed, uncommonly found in multiplexes. Appaloosa is the latest reason why.
While he thankfully avoids the actor-filmmaker avenger fantasies of The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada, Harris doesn't have the genre chops to fill Appaloosa's empty spaces.
Bring back Hopalong Cassidy and Randolph Scott and you've got the making of a respectable horse opera.
It isn't a bad film, but the pacing drags it down to the level of just another horse opera when it could have been so much more.
...so old-fashioned it even carries a troubling dose of old-fashioned sexism.
The various symbols never coalesce into metaphor so much as they stand stagnant and hollow at the edges of the frame.
It's unfortunate for everyone concerned, and for the film, that the train chugs into town one day.
Latest News for Appaloosa
April 18, 2009:
Crackling eccentric verbal wit as Harris' marshal seeks to 'button up this town tighter than a nun's corset' while overcome by Zellweger's irresistible flirty charms, because she 'chews her food nicely and even takes a bath before going to bed. ![]()
More...
January 13, 2009:
Crackling eccentric verbal wit as Harris' marshal seeks to 'button up this town tighter than a nun's corset' while overcome by Zellweger's irresistible flirty charms, because she 'chews her food nicely and even takes a bath before going to bed. ![]()
More...
January 10, 2009:
Crackling eccentric verbal wit as Harris' marshal seeks to 'button up this town tighter than a nun's corset' while overcome by Zellweger's irresistible flirty charms, because she 'chews her food nicely and even takes a bath before going to bed. ![]()
More...
October 02, 2008:
Box Office Guru Preview: Chihuahua to Overtake Multiplexes
Hollywood kicks off the fourth quarter with a stampede of new releases that will test the elasticity of the marketplace. Ambulances are already on standby to rush the high... More...
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